英:[ˈkænən]
美:[ˈkænən]
英:[ˈkænən]
美:[ˈkænən]
复数:canons
noun (1)
a regulation or dogma decreed by a church council
a provision of canon law
[Middle English, from Anglo-French, from Late Latin, from Latin, model] the most solemn and unvarying part of the Mass including the consecration of the bread and wine
an authoritative list of books accepted as Holy Scripture
the authentic works of a writer
the Chaucer canon
a sanctioned or accepted group or body of related works
the canon of great literature
an accepted principle or rule
a criterion or standard of judgment
the canons of good taste
a body of principles, rules, standards, or norms
according to newspaper canon … a big story calls for a lot of copy—A. J. Liebling
[Late Greek kanōn, from Greek, model] a contrapuntal musical composition in which each successively entering voice presents the initial theme usually transformed in a strictly consistent way
noun (2)
a clergyman belonging to the chapter or the staff of a cathedral or collegiate church
canon regular
noun (3)
a deep narrow valley with steep sides and often with a stream flowing through it
something resembling a canyon
the city's concrete canyons
canon law教会法;教会法规
"规则或法律",古英语 canon"教会的规则、法律或法令",来自古法语 canon 或直接源自晚期拉丁语 canon"教会法律,教会权威颁布的规则或教义",在古典拉丁语中是 "测量线,规则",源自希腊语 kanon"任何直杆或条; 规则; 卓越的标准",也许来自 kanna"芦苇"(见 cane (n.))。
这个拉丁词在教会用法中被用来表示 "教会的法令"。 "规则或原则" 的一般意义始于14世纪晚期; "判断标准" 的意义始于大约1600年。从大约1400年开始,它表示 "圣经,基督教会所接受的圣经书籍",也扩展到承认卓越或至高无上的世俗书籍。 "公认的圣人目录" 的含义始于1727年。 "一种赋格式的作品" 的音乐意义始于1590年代。相关词汇: Canonicity。
The secular canon, with the word meaning a catalog of approved authors, does not actually begin until the middle of the eighteenth century .... [Harold Bloom, "The Western Canon," 1994].
"世俗经典" 这个词的含义是指经过批准的作者目录,实际上直到18世纪中期才开始出现.... [哈罗德·布鲁姆,《西方经典》,1994年]。
规范:用于科学程序的工作规则或准则
Noun (1) Middle English, from Old English, from Late Latin, from Latin, ruler, rule, model, standard, from Greek kanōn Noun (2) Middle English canoun, from Anglo-French *canoun, chanoun, from Late Latin canonicus one living under a rule, from Latin, according to rule, from Greek kanonikos, from kanōn
The first known use of canon was before the 12th century
canopy1 of 2noun
a covering over a bed, throne, or shrine or carried on poles (as over a person of high rank)
awning
a shade or shelter that hangs over somethingespecially: the uppermost spreading layer of a forest
the fabric part of a parachute that catches the air
canopy2 of 2verb
to cover with or as if with a canopy
canopy1 of 2noun
a covering over a bed, throne, or shrine or carried on poles (as over a person of high rank)
awning
a shade or shelter that hangs over somethingespecially: the uppermost spreading layer of a forest
the fabric part of a parachute that catches the air
canopy2 of 2verb
to cover with or as if with a canopy
canopy1 of 2noun
a covering over a bed, throne, or shrine or carried on poles (as over a person of high rank)
awning
a shade or shelter that hangs over somethingespecially: the uppermost spreading layer of a forest
the fabric part of a parachute that catches the air
canopy2 of 2verb
to cover with or as if with a canopy
cannonnoun
a large heavy gun usually mounted on wheels
an automatic gun of large caliber on an airplane
canonizeverb
to declare to be a saint and worthy of public respect
to treat something as if it were sacred
canonizeverb
to declare to be a saint and worthy of public respect
to treat something as if it were sacred
canonicaladjective
relating to or allowed by church law
following a general rule or accepted procedure
canonicaladjective
relating to or allowed by church law
following a general rule or accepted procedure
canon1 of 3noun
a church law or decree
an official list (as of the books of the Bible)
an accepted standard or rule
canons of good taste
canon2 of 3noun
a member of the clergy who is on the staff of a cathedral
cañon3 of 3
1 Mind you, my vote won’t count; the future of the specific canon will be decided by people younger than me.
2 Often, these have been new works in English, but for companies interested in reimagining the classic canon, one question regularly arises: How to give mobile audiences the supertitle translations to which they have become accustomed?
3 It will be a prequel that ditches the canon in order to explore the events between The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings, events so dull that Tolkien didn’t bother committing them to paper.
4 But not everyone agrees, and this speaks to a debate deep within fandom culture, starting with what counts as the canon in a fictional world like Harry Potter’s.
5 Taste, and the canon, shifts gradually but inexorably.
6 It’s a point of pride for the musicians to be able to play anything in the vast canon.
7 By all accounts, the Highwaymen were less interested in color theory or the canon than in making a living.
8 Monument Avenue is just one example of how the City Beautiful movement established a canon of urban beauty across America.
9 If anything unites these painters, said Mr. Rolling, it’s a “call and response to the absence of relatable figures in the canon of painting.”
10 If American cinema has a venerable history of husbanding genre conventions to resonant real-world concerns, it also has a canon of serious dramas deeply inscribed with and informed by the social forces of their eras.
11 Bobby Smith, Nicholas McDonough and Paul Scanlan grandly round out the dozen Sondheim singers, and Gardiner, Signature’s associate artistic director, reasserts his command here of the Sondheim canon — the company’s originating raison d’etre.
12 It sounds like a mixed-quality hodgepodge representing the standard canon of late medieval and Renaissance Venetian painters.
13 One of his more unexpected sources is the lyrical canon of the Beatles.
14 Over generations, English teachers have voiced many reasons to teach books, and the canon in particular: to instill a common culture, foster citizenship, build empathy and cultivate lifelong readers.
15 But when Tár schools a Juilliard class that a conductor’s job is to “sublimate yourself” into the canon of white male composers, the young musicians do not bend to her will.
16 Aimed at "readers and students", it is a personable stroll through a predictable canon: Charlotte Brontë, Forster, Keats, Milton, Hardy et al – plus JK Rowling, perhaps thrown in so as not to appear snobbish.
17 There’s nothing superficial about Pärt’s music; it’s steeped in a profound knowledge of the vocabulary of the Western canon, reaching back to the medieval plainchant that it so audibly evokes.
18 Ms. Benton questioned her looks and her voice, a deft soprano that doesn’t lend itself to “this canon of black girl songs you’re supposed to be able to sing,” she said.
19 When I was a young man starting off I picked up “The Fire Next Time,” and I read it over and over, and I picked up every book I could find in the Baldwin canon.
20 And there’s always more for Mr. Child to add to his canon of Reacher remarks and physical snapshots of the big guy.
2 法规
law prescription statute code regulation ordinance constitutional legislation establishment enactment
3 规则
law rule regulation theorem daily regular institute formula observance order code statute imperative
4 成员
6 宗规
10 原则
cause position rule basis principle dictate torch tenet oriflamme kaupapa politics -ism system base lodestar policy theory criterion methodology creed idea gospel
11 卡农
12 标准
value test standard guide regulation criterion norm dictate calibre frame of reference normal canonical normative level measure Mark specification gauge Norm benchmark sensibility textbook ortho- template orthodox received criteria par baseline
13 真作
15 大教堂教士
16 准则
gospel precept test code rule guide formula guideline criterion way of life basis framework verity frame of reference norm maxim guide line square guidepost principle
17 神职人员
19 真经
20 定理
21 教令
23 规范
standard canonical normative prescriptive code etiquette guide reputable specification norm law tradition book dharma
24 卡农曲
25 正典
27 圣徒名单